Uganda counts down to launch of PearlAfricaSat1

The Cygnus spacecraft and an Antares rocket - similar to this GX5 - were developed by three Ugandan engineers after President Museveni directed the development of a National Space Agency and Institute for Uganda.

Satellite data could support IoT for industry, security and safety

Uganda will launch debut satellite PearlAfricaSat-1 today (November 7) according to  Americaโ€™s National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) after the event was postponed by a fire alarm at the operations control centre.

Ugandaโ€™s partnership the Kyushu Institute of Technology (Kyutech) in Japan and involved training three graduate engineers to design, build, test and launch Ugandaโ€™s first satellite. The satellite was developed by Ugandan engineers Edgar Mujuni, Bonny Omara, and Derrick Tebusweke.

According to the founding engineers, the PearlAfricaSat-1 will help provide research and observation data in six primary areas including weather forecast; land, water and mineral mapping; agriculture monitoring; infrastructure planning; border security and disaster prevention.

The development of the satellite is part of the Joint Global Multi-Nation Birds Satellite Project that began in October 2019 after President Museveni directed the development of a National Space Agency and Institute.

โ€œTodayโ€™s planned CRS18 launch has been scrubbed due to a fire alarm at the mission operations control center in Dulles, Virginia. Liftoff of the Cygnus spacecraft is now set for Nov. 7 at 5:27am ET (10:27 UTC). Weโ€™ll go live at 5am,โ€ NASA said in a statement.

โ€œThe Cygnus spacecraft and Antares rocket remain healthy at the Wallops launch site,โ€ said NASA. โ€œThe next launch attempt will be Monday, Nov. 7, in a five-minute window that opens at 5:27 a.m. EST. Weather for that window is currently forecast as 75% favourable: High pressure looks to continue to provide tranquil weather to the Mid-Atlantic before breezy conditions impact the Wallops area Tuesday.โ€